cma-korean-art: Bamboo in Moonlight, 1500s, Cleveland Museum of Art: Korean ArtThis painting depicts
cma-korean-art: Bamboo in Moonlight, 1500s, Cleveland Museum of Art: Korean ArtThis painting depicts the full moon shining through a stand of bamboo, and for Joseon literati it would have conveyed the sense of life in harmony with nature to which they aspired. Bamboo is a potent symbol across Asia, and for Confucian societies is thought of as one of the “four gentlemen” along with plum trees, orchids, and chrysanthemums. Each of these plants encompasses an important and desired Confucian trait, and all are often depicted in Korean painting. Bamboo has immense flexibility and is able to bend to extremes without breaking—a much desired attribute for a Confucian scholar. Here, the painter has romanticized the more typical image of bamboo by adding the rising moon.Size: Painting only: 85.2 x 33.5 cm (33 9/16 x 13 3/16 in.); Overall: 163 x 43.2 cm (64 3/16 x 17 in.)Medium: hanging scroll; ink on paperhttps://clevelandart.org/art/1987.186 -- source link
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